I'm not 100% sure but I am pretty sure so yes i think
Sending a picture does count as a text message with the service provider.
Most apps do not have it where you receive the texts by email with any texting app.
You can have the person who is texting you text to your email address instead. Instead of putting the number into the recipient's box they would only have to substitute your email address for it.
No. Moble Messaging is not free. It is like a text message. Every IM you receive and text cost depending on your texting plan. But if you have unlimited texting then it count in unlimited texting and you will not pay more in your phone bills.
On a Kindle Fire, the closest you can get to texting is through AIM, which you will need an email account for. download the app text+
That texting for love is very fake and random, don't count on it to get your true love.
instead of texting to a phone number put in the email address
No they will not be charged for sending you a text from there e-mail and I know because, I have a blackberry. TTyl Tif999
Texting is not a feature in Gmail ever. You cannot text to mobile to a person. You can only send a hangout message via hangout or an email.
It's just like texting. Send a text to your email address, then check your email and download. then go to your myspace and upload it.
Texts are not emails but they are exactly alike although texting is on a phone and emails are usually on the computer so the answer is no because they are different.
WikiAnswers shouldn't be texting you. We don't have any mobile application that would send to your phone. Our email could come to your phone (but not by text, just by email phone applications). If you get Facebook or Twitter updates by text, and some of them are from us, those are just posts on FB or Twitter, and you would have to turn off texting in whatever service that is delivering our stuff to you that way, or stop following us on those services.
Text codes are often used to enter sweepstakes and contests. Text codes are also used for verification and security purposes, such as Google's 2-step verification system for email.